Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 July 1936 — Page 7
Muncie Horse Show Attracts Many E Entries
Local Owners to Exhibit| Mounts at Annual Affair.
Entries to date for the fifth annual horse show to be held Aug. 1-3, at the Muncie Fairground, are far ahead of last year, Mrs. William H. Ball, Muncie, chairman, announced today. Indianapolis ownérs are to be included among those entering horses for Various events. The show is to open on Saturday afternoon with a schedule of 10 classes for saddle horses, hunters and jumpers, horsemanship and combination horses. Ten more classes, with special. events for women riders, one class for fine harness horses, and classes for hunters and jumpers are to be included on Saturday night's program. The big stake event is scheduled for. the following afternoon. for three-gaited and five-gaited saddle horses and the finals for hunters and jumpers. Featuring the program is to be a community horse interest class, adapted from the Indiana Saddle Horse roundup, held every fall at Gregg Farm. ntries are to be made by communities instead of by individuals. This class is mainly for pleasure horses. Seward B. Price is Muncie fair horse show secretary and is in
charge of information concerning entries,
Pythian Picnic to Be Sunday in State Park
Swimming, horseshoe pitching, games, contests, sight-seeing and short talks are to entertain members of the Knights of Pythias, Pythian Sisters, their families and friends at a central Indiana Pythian - picnic Sunday at Brown County State Park, Visitors from more than 100 cities and towns are to participate, according to Carl R. Mitchell, Indianapolis, general chairman. Judge - J. W. Todd, Hammond, grand chancellor of the Knights of Pythias of Indiana; Mrs. Fern . Beber, Fort Wayne, grand chief of Pythian Sisters; William Morehead, Chicago, deputy supreme chancellor; Russell B. Dalrymple, Knightstown, grand vice-chancellor, and M. D. Stoker, Lafayette, Indiana Pythian Home superintendent, are to attend.
Misses Jean and. Martha McHatton have returned from a vacation in Colorado. Miss Jean McHatton attended the Delta Delta Delta Sorority national convention in Colorado Springs, after which she and her sister visited an uncle, Harrison
Summer Living Room _ Out-of-Doors Adds to Comfort.
BY LAURA LOU BROOKMAN NEA Service Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, July 13.—8 8 $10 bill to cover the entire front porch isn't nearly the magician’s trick it seems. It can be done ljterally. With $10 in her handbag, the thrifty housewife can buy everything she needs to furnish the porch or terrace of her home in order to turn it into a
too, so the neighbors will view it with envious and admiring glances! If she has as much as $20 to spend she can make selections that give a really lavish effect. Manufacturers: have outdone themselves this year to produce inrexpensive, durable porch furniture that is also ‘pleasing to the eye. They've thought of comfort, wear-and-tearzeven space-saving. DePsigns are simple and attractive. Many of the chairs and tables—not the least bit flimsy, either—can be folded flat, making it easy to move them from the porch to the lawn and back. Or to cart the whole outfit out to the summer cottage. It’s a thought for next winter, too, when this furniture will take the least possible storage space.
What $10 Buys A group assembled for $10 includes: One slat-backed arm chair, one rocker, one chair with canvas back and seat; a lawn table large enough to hold a beverage tray, books and magazines. The combined cost of the chairs and table is less than $10, leaving enough to buy chintz, gingham, cretonne or denim for cushions and chair pads. The table and slat-backed chair in this group are of unfinished wood, intended to be used just as they are, or if you prefer, painted or varnished. A coat of clear varnish is recommended because it gives a weather resisting finish. Dipping down a little deeper into
{ the purse—down as deep as $16.76,
to be exact-—a second grouping was selected for families that enjoy eating outdoors. A folding table and metal tea wagon provide ample space for serving buffet luncheons and suppers, or, for that matter, breakfasts, The bench in this group is unusually sturdy. It has back and arms for comfort, though similar models without them can be secured. The slat-backed armchair can be folded flat. The table folds also, and can be adjusted at either of two "heights—25 or 27 inches from the floor, It hds a 5ply top to prevent warping and is finished with clear varnish.
From $16.75 Up
If you prefer a larger table, those in trestle or sawbuck style are to’ be had in a variety of sizes. The largest measures six feet, and will seal 10 easily. These tables are of heavy, knotty pine, 122 inches thick. They are unfinished and should be treated with clear varnish, with er without first applying a coat of light stain, Knotty pine, incidentally, is considered more desirable for such
Cale, in Denver.
pieces than wood without knots.
sumer living room. And furnish it, |
2 What $10 will do to furnish the
and tables are of unfinished pine.
is illustrated in the top photograph. The armchair -
in the foreground and rocker can be folded flat.
porch or terrace
Both the chair
The lower group, slightly more expensive, was selected for out-of-doors buffet suppers. The red . and white metal tea wagon has racks for glasses and beverage pitcher below. The top. tray is removable.
Metal tables with tile or glass tops are to be had, too, within the inexpensive price range. There are metal chairs—quite comfortable—
that . defy the weather to do its worst.: The metal wear is gay-look-
ing—painted white ‘with Chinese red, sea blue or bright green trim. If you chose unpainted furniture, or if you already own some that needs only a fresh coat of paint to look new, now: is the time to unleash your fancy in regard to color. “The
brighter the better” is this years rule. Orange, canary, jade green and vermillion are among the leaders. All-white furniture with cushjons and other accessories in one— or more—of these hues 1s popular, Yop. hrs ;
New Fender Mile Ham Is Easy
to Prepare
In meal planning—always a per= plexing phase’ of homemaking—one * good system to follow is to “build” your meals about the meat course, For if that main dish is righ’, the rest of the dinner just naturally seems to fall in line. One of the most satisfectory meat dishes for any dinner, either for a special occasion or a regular family meal, is a -baked whole ham. Its delicious flavor blends weil! with almost any accompanying food, and you can be certain to have plenty of slices to provide second aielpings for even a large group, with enough left, usually, to form the basis of another meal. However, here is good news! All the advantages tne ordinary “axed ham possesses are increased ow in a new Kind of tender-made ham, recently put on the market, a. deliciously miid flavored ham which
Cool Clothes Get All the Applause in Hot Weather
BY ALICIA HART Times Special Writer These days when the temperature reaches unbelievable heights and crisp breezes are few and far between, the woman who looks cool gets all the applause. This is the time to go in for simple clothes, an even simpler coiffure, a minimum of makeup, white-as-snow accessories
a struggle that ou occasionally appear in a dress that isn't quite n, don’t wear them
only when the elbows and arms below them dre sctupulously Slew. One t one arm you as a person w} isn’t exactly fastidi-_ ous. White cotton gloves, like stock ings and White lingerie collars, never should be worn the second day. It annoy you, but, if you want to look cool—therefore cool—during the day, you simply will have to do a bit of
Delicious to Eat
be heated before it is served.
ham gall you have to do is to put it into a hot oven (450 degrees F.) in an uncovered roasting pan and heat it thoroughly for about one hour. Then it will be ready for you: table, full of flavor and ‘deliciously tender. To give the ham a very special appearance do this: After it has been heated for about three-quarters of an hour, remove from the oven and score fat. Sprinkle generously with maple syrup or - with brown sugar. Then make a sauce by. combining 1 quart boiling water with 1 cup
teaspoon pepper sauce, 1 tablespoon
vinegar, and 1 teaspoon salt. Pour this sauce over the ham, return to oven, and heat for approximately 15 tminutes longer, basting frequently with the sauce, Serve at, once and garnish with sauteed pineapple rings. The next time you have very special guests to entertain, try a menu like this: HAM DINNE Fruit Cocktail aked Tender-Made Ham Parsley Bed Potatoes Buttered Peas
Tomtbto and Lettuce Salad with nch - Dressing - IR Pie Coffee This new kind of ham can also be easily and quickly served as a ham steak. A steak an inch thick can be placed in a not oven (550 degrees Fahrenheit) and in 12 minutes you can take it oul, crisp and brown and ready to serve. In fact, the possibilities and variety of ways of serving this new tender-made ham seem endless. It can be heated in the broiler, and it fits well into the now popular com-
- | bination grill for the ham slices require no longer time to be heated will
than do the quickly broiled vegetables and fruits (tomatoes, bananas, apricots, etc.).
Couple to Live in Local Apartment
Times Special
is 80 tender that it needs only to If you wish to serve it as a whole |
seedless raising. Boil 3 minutes, then | | add 1 tablespoon, maple extract, 1}
Worcestershire sauce, 1 tablespoon |
FLAPPER FANNY SAYS:
REG. U. 8. PAT. OFF.
The medal goes to those never meddle in others affairs.
who
Miss Renn, John M. Scott Exchange Marriage Vows
Mr. and: Mrs. John M. Scott are on a wedding trip’ in the Adirondacks and Canada. Before her
marriage yesterday at the First Lutheran Church, Mrs. Scott was Miss Florence Harriet Renn, daugh-
| ter of Mrs. A. E. Renn. Mr. Scott,
Grand Rapids, Mich, is a son of Mrs. K. E. Scott. Vows were exchanged before an altar arranged with greenery and white flowers. The Rev. Ira Ladd, Louisville, officiated. Miss Pauline Roes, organist, played bridal music. Miss Vera Sudbrock, soloist, sang “Beloved It Is Morn,” “Until,” and a song written for the bride by Mrs. Thor G. Wesenberg, president of the Butler University Women’s Council, of which Mrs. Scott was secretary. A trio, composed of Misses Fannie Mae, Carol and Marthabelle | Geisler, sang “Calm As the Night.” Morton Wert Renn gave his sister in marriage. The wedding dress of white satin was fashioned with a duchess lace yoke and collar. The
Summer Christmas Party Aids Mission Children in Winter |
Children in Chinese mission fields will know the joy of Christmas gifts this year because Indianapolis Baptist women braved the heat of a Hoosier midsummer day for a Christmas tree celebration. . The celebration is to be held mm midsummer so that the gifts will reach their destination by the
way to dress, bathe and care for children. .
Matron, Patron
bride Wore the veil worn by her mother and by an aunt, Mrs. Warren Keator, Findlay, O., and carried her mother’s. ‘wedding handkérchief. Her prayerbook had satin streamers with a shower of sweetheart roses. Attendants wore chiffon gowns in pastel shades. Mrs. James Otto wore pink; Miss Ruby Hill, tur-
fort, lavender, and Miss Mary Kathryn Mangus, yellow. Walton Scott, Calumet City, IH. was his brother's best man, and ushers included William Storey, Harold Chloupek, Hilton B. Currens and Urban K. Wilde Jr. At a reception at the Rénn home, 4189 Carrollton-av, Miss Julia Guess played the harp. Assistants included Mrs. Oran Stanley, Hamilton, N. Y., and Misses Gayle and Emma Lou Thornbrough, Mary Bohn-
ton, Franny Stalker and Lois Wray. The bride was graduated from Butler University. She is. a member of Alpha Chi Omega Sorority. Mr. Scott is a Purdue University graduate and a member of Theta Tau Fraternity. Among guests from out-of-town were Dr. and Mrs. Ladd, Dr. and Mrs. Arthur Barnett, Mr. ‘and Mrs. Arthur A. Will and family, Mrs. Showers’ nid u- ok Hone mer vis, all of Louisville; A. Eugene Renn, Philay Mrs. Frank C
Julia Howard Are Honored |
Mrs. Mary Frances Price, Vin. cennes, worthy grand matron, and
Delph McKesson, Plymouth, worthy grand patron of the Indiana Grand chapter, Order of Eastern’ Star, were
SORORITY WOE TO VISIT MEETING
XN Room to Play,
too
| gate and step inside.
quoise; Miss Ruth Robison, Frank- |:
stadt, Alice Portteus, Grace Shel-|.
a- | him all the romantic
Urges Writer
Set Aside Space in Yard for Sand Pile, Swing, Other Devices.
(Dr. Morris Fishbein’ discusses in"fant health. Page 10)
BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON “Water, water everywhere, and not a drop to drink.” Ground, ground everywhere and
not an inch to play on. Thus runs Canto the Fifth of the modern
poem. The first *four concern public playgrounds, of which there are few; apartment “houses in crowded areas with no thought of hot - little ‘cliff-dwellers; houses without yards; long suburban streets of beautiful Jawns and flower beds with unprinted keep off
The latter can’t be helped, because owners who take pride in property not only have a right to safe-guard it, but are doing community service in beautifying their land. The fifth article deals with available yards for “own” children. A few days ago I saw the ideal plan for dividing off the family plot so that mother and dad could have their share for lawn and flowers and the children their own domain as well. We'll skip the geranium beds and lily pool and go on toward the little white picket fence—it wasn't a big yard—open the small
“Perfect” Says Visitor
A space eighteen feet or so square, was walled on two sides by a hedge, on one. by a vine-covered garage wall and on the garden side by the picket fence. In one end was a sand-pile, a swing, a sliding board and a pipe with a shower. Scattered about were dolls, balls, blocks and the usual toys, including a doll house, that also servéd for storage over night. Two little girls, almost minus clothes, were playing there happily—one a mere baby. “I call this perfect,” remarked this visitor admiringly. “Not a thing to get hurt on. And everything seems fo be here. A sort of sublimated play-pen.” “Exactly,” assented the proud young mother. “I nagged at Charlie for a year before he got my idea. We had the space, shut in on two sides. All we needed was the fence and some more hedge. Charlie had the fence made in sections and put it up himself. “The hedge was cheap and easy. It's growing fine. .
: Eliminates Worries
“I don't have to worry about them falling off porches now, or wandering out on the street. I have work to do and I can turn them loose here until I'm finished. They can’t reach the gate lock or the shower valve. I turn that on them for awhile on hot days. If I didn’t have that yard, I'd have to keep baby. in her little. pen nearly all the time snd she doesn’t get exercise enough in it. Dogs can't get in the yard, and besides it’s easier to shoo oft older and sometimes troublesome children this way, too.” “It’s something to ‘suggest to other mothers,” I remarked. “And with my hearty endorse-. ment,” said she. “If they only knew what a grand relief it is.” 80 many good lots go to waste; it seems to me a plan well worth trying. If the fence is a problem, there's chicken-wire—strong, cheap and durable. And anybody can plant a hedge. Indeed it’s hard to keep a good hedge down—or even
one not so (Copyright. 1936. NEA Service, Inc.)
New Nail Polish Use
A drop of nail polish will prevent runners in silk hose from growing longer. Soap, moistened and rubbed on the runner, will serve the same purpose, although less effectively.
death
plunged handsome," reckless Peter Henderson, taking with ; of the girl he . had married only an : ‘hour before. Read This Thrilling -NBw STORY |
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hunter have announced the marriage of their daughter, Miss Helen Hunter (above) to Roger Stephens, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Stephens.
The couple is to live at 664 E. 17th-st.
CHURCH WEDDING TO BE JULY 28
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Reinhardt have announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Mary Loretta Reinhardt, to Floyd O. Wildridge,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wildridge, Washington. The ceremony is to be solemnized at 7 p. m. Tuesday, July 28, at St. Patrick's Catholic Church.
N: ames Aug. 22 Marriage Date
Vows to Be Exchanged With John Lasher, New York.
Miss Peggy Morrison, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Morrison, and John C. Lasher, New York, son of Mr. and Mrs, Clinton D. Lasher, Evanston, Ill, and formerly of Ine dianapolis, have set Aug. 22 as the date for their marriage. The evening ceremony is to be read in the Tabernacle Presbyte=rian Church by the Rev. J. Ambrose Dunkel. : Misses Mary Elam, Katherine Ful ton and Dorothy Young are to be
bridesmaids, and Miss Faith Howe ard, Buffalo, N. Y,, is to be maid of honor. : James A. Morrison, brother of the bride-to-be, is to be Mr. Lasher's best man. Paul Torrence, Evanston; Sam Adams, Fort Wayne, and Robert Elliott are to be ushers, Miss Morrison attended Bradford Junior College and Sarah Lawrence College. She is a member of Christ amore Aid Society. Mr. Lasher attended Park School and Williams College: He is a mem= ber of Phi Delta Theta, social fra= ternity, and Phi Beta Kappa, hone orary scholastic organization.
Blocks
Entire Store Closes Saturdayat1P. M.
HALF-
Fut sat. dst 9300 9% 2
a re
leaks.
ICE REFRIGERATORS
50 Ib. to 100 Ib. Bozes Some slightly marred floor samples
A mid-summer ‘opportunity to replace your old ice box with a very efficient new one of all-steel construction. Heavily insulated with an air space around the ice chamber, and rubber gaskets around the doors to prevent airOt rust-resisting metal in washable enamel finish. Equipped with glass water trap that will not rust,
100-Lb. Refrigerators reduced to........$14.75 . 70-Lb. Refrigerators reduced to........$13.25
50-Lb. Refrigerators reduced to.........$9.98 $1 DOWN DELIVERS YOUR ICE BOX
PRIGE
BLOCK'S—Fifth Floor.
